making it big.
They were going to do it, shocking as that seemed for three fucked-up kids once headed directly for juvy without passing go.
But it was more than money on the line and they both knew it. Brody, the ultimate guy’s guy-and commitmentphobe to boot-had allowed Maddie to get beneath his skin.
Not that the big guy would ever admit it. Hell, no. Show a weakness? Brody? He’d rather gnaw off his own arm. “She’s saved our ass time and time again,” Shayne reminded him.
As he knew this to be true, Brody fell silent. Maddie
“Shit. Noah’s so pussy-whipped he can’t even see straight. They’re still in his office, you know. Him and Bailey. Someone’s going to have to send food in there to sustain them.”
“Jealous?”
That made Brody laugh. “Of having a wife? Are you kidding me?”
“How about for having sex whenever you want it?”
“You don’t need a wife for that, so why should I? And who are you in there with anyway? Not Maddie, not Michelle. Kathleen?”
“Left the country.”
“Dude.”
“What does that mean?”
“That’s what a girl says when she dumps you.”
“I did not get dumped.” He’d so been dumped.
“So you’re in there with someone new, then,” Brody decided. “Big surprise.”
“Hey.” Shayne might have the reputation for going through women like some went through fine wine, but he’d always used discretion and was careful to be only with women looking for the same thing he was-a good time.
Dani had certainly seemed to fit that bill. She’d come on to him, always a fun bonus, and had seemed lucid enough at the time, but now that he knew who she was and that the world in general considered her to be crazy, he felt uncomfortable, as if he’d taken advantage of her somehow. “I thought you said I was in here alone.”
“Well if you are, self-gratify on your own time. You’ve got at least fifty socialites out here, drinking and being merry, all way too close to million-dollar planes.” Brody was extremely protective of the planes. “People are all over them, carrying flutes of champagne and tiny plates of fancy shit masquerading as food. So please, get your ass out here and flash that poster-boy smile as you tell everyone to watch the damn planes. Ah, shit-”
“What?”
“Maddie, three o’clock,” he hissed. “Heading right for me.” The big, badass Brody sounded terrified. “She’s got that look in her eye too. The gonna chew me up and spit me out look.”
Shayne had to laugh. “She’s a whole foot and a hundred pounds lighter than you. Suck it up, you chicken shit.”
“You have no idea-
Shayne slipped his phone back in his pocket and had no sooner reached for the closet door to go out and rescue the planes when it opened and someone slipped inside.
Dani.
“Oh, thank God you’re still in here.” She gulped. “Houston, we have a problem.” She was drenched, shaking, and sobbing for breath as she turned and slammed the door before whipping back around, eyes so wide there was nothing but white all around her dark irises. If he thought she’d looked like a mess before, it was nothing to now, with water streaming down her face, her hair plastered to her head, her dress sucked up against her like a second skin. “Ohmigod, Shayne-”
“Dani.” Jesus, what had happened? With no other choice, he put his hands on her, drawing her close even though she was wet as hell, and making him the same. “Are you all right?”
“Yes, but”-she gulped again, pointed to the door-“out there-” Burrowing against him, she shuddered.
She felt so small and cold, and her whole body was racked by her next shiver. He tried to warm her up with his body heat. “What happened?”
“I saw-I need to call the police but I don’t think I can dial. Can you dial?” Pulling free, she patted herself down.
He saw the exact second that it registered, she had no pockets in that little black dress, and most likely no cell phone.
“My phone’s in my car,” she whispered. “And my car’s in the shop. I need a phone. He needs help. We have to help.”
Her eyes were fully dilated, twin balls of horror, and he pulled out his cell. “Who needs help? Tell me, and I’ll call.”
“There’s a dead body. I saw the gun.” She covered her face. “I saw it happen, ohmigod, Shayne, I saw it happen.”
His gut went cold. “Where?”
“Out front.”
A dead body.
A gun…
Passing a server who tried to offer him a tray of hors d’oeuvres, he headed out the double front doors. It was raining like a mother, coming down in slashing sheets that blocked out much of the light from the two lamplights on either side of the walkway. As the doors closed behind him, shutting out the sounds of the party, all he could hear was the rain slapping the concrete.
There was absolutely no one else around. No engines running, no people, nothing. Turning in a slow circle, he took a second look, and a third. He even moved down the steps, directly into the rain, getting soaked within seconds as he walked into the parking lot, up and down the aisles of parked cars, looking, searching…
Finding nothing.
Slowly heading back, he blinked past the water in his face, taking in the parking lot one last time before the front doors opened.
Dani.
“Did you call the police?” she demanded, hugging herself. “We have to get them out here right away.”
She needed a coat. And a warm room.
And possibly, a straitjacket. “Dani.”
She stared at him with dark, tormented eyes, then turned to look at a spot only five feet from him, her gaze glued to the sidewalk.
The empty sidewalk. “But…” She didn’t say what he’d already discovered.
No dead body. No gun. No bloodstains.
Nothing.
As if to emphasize this, the rain increased, hitting the ground like bullets, pounding into him with painful velocity.
Shoving her hands into her hair, Dani pushed the strands off her face, then stepped to some invisible mark and slowly turned to him. “It was here.” She hunkered down to get a closer look at nothing. “Right here.”
“What was that, exactly?”
Straightening, she turned and hobbled into the parking lot, limping on her one high-heeled sandal.
“There’s nothing there, Dani.”
“But only a few minutes have passed. Not long enough to dispose of a body and all the evidence, right?” Standing in the downpour, she turned in a slow circle as he’d done, taking in the parking lot, the area all around them, her bare limbs gleaming with rain water, pale and shimmering as she hugged herself.